Grafting marijuana plants? is it possible?

EmilyRose

Member
I have done alot of gardening over the years (nonweed..) and i have alot of experience in grafting roses to get like a white rose to grow off a red rose plant. would it be possible to get one strain of weed to grow on another. when its harvested if you took a small section and grafted it onto a different plant would it be possible? for space saving purposes...
XX Emily
 

Pureblood89

Well-Known Member
My old man told me once that you can graft branches of hops plants onto cannabis and they will acquire the resin glands of the cannabis plant.
 

darkdestruction420

Well-Known Member
i found this info about hops and cannabis online, its an interesting read.


"One of the most persistent myths in marijuana lore concerns grafting Cannabis to its closest relative. Humulus, the hops plant of beer-making fame. The myth is that a hops scion (shoot or top portion of the stem) grafted to a marijuana stock (lower stem and root) will contain the active ingredients of marijuana. The beauty of such a graft is that it would be difficult to identify as marijuana and, possible, the plant would not be covered under marijuana statutes. Unfortunately, the myth is false. It is possible to successfully graft Cannabis with Humulus, but the hops portion will not contain any cannabinoids.

In 1975, the research team of Crombie and Crombie grafted hops scions on Cannabis stocks from both hemp and marijuana (Thailand) plants 205. Cannabis scions were also grafted to hops stocks. In both cases, the Cannabis portion of the graft continued to produce its characteristic amounts of cannabinoids when compared to ungrafted controls, but the hops portions of the grafts contained no cannabinoids. This experiment was well-designed and carried out. Sophisticated methods were used for detecting THC, THCV, CBD, CBC, CBN, and CBG. Yet none of these were detected in the hops portions.

The grafting myth grew out of work by H.E. Warmke, which was carried out for the government during the early 1940's in an attempt to develop hemp strains that would not contain the "undesirable" drug 58. The testing procedure for the active ingredients was crude. Small animals, such as the water flea Daphnia, were immersed in water with various concentration of acetone extracts from hemp. The strength of the drug was estimated by the number of animals killed in a given period of time. As stated by Warmke, "The Daphnia assay is not specific for the marijuana drug ... once measures any and all toxic substances in hemp (or hop) leaves that are extracted with acetone, whether or not these have specific marijuana activity." Clearly it was other compounds, not cannabinoids, that were detected in these grafting experiments.

Unfortunately, this myth has caused some growers to waste a lot of time and effort in raising a worthless stash of hops leaves. It has also leg growers to some false conclusions about the plant. For instance, if the hops scion contains cannabinoids, the reasonable assumption is that the cannabinoids are being produced in the Cannabis part and translocated to the hops scion, or that the Cannabis root or stem is responsible for producing the cannabinoids precursors.

From this assumption, growers also get the idea that the resin is flowing in the plant. The myth has bolstered the ideas that cutting, splitting, or bending the stem will send the resin up the plant or prevent the resin from going down the plant. As explained in our discussion of resin glands in section 2, these ideas are erroneous. Only a small percentage of the cannabinoids are present in the internal tissues (laticiferous cells) of the plant. Almost all the cannabinoids are contained and manufactured in the resin glands, which cover the outer surfaces of the above-ground plant parts. Cannabinoids remain in the resin glands and are not translocated to other plant parts.

We have heard several claims that leaves from hops grafted on marijuana were psychoactive. Only one such case claimed to be first hand, and we never did see or smoke the material. We doubt these claims. Hops plants do have resin glands similar to those on marijuana, and many of the substances that make up the resin are common to both plants. But of several species and many varieties of hops tested with modern techniques for detecting cannabinoids, no cannabinoids have ever been detected 212.

The commercially valuable component of hops is lupulin, a mildly psychoactive substance used to make beer. To our knowledge, no other known psychoactive substances has been isolated from hops. But since these grafting claims persist, perhaps pot-heads should take a closer look at the hops plant.

Most growers who have tried grafting Cannabis and Humulus are unsuccessful. Compared to many plants, Cannabis does not take grafts easily. Most of the standard grafting techniques you've probably seen for grafting Cannabis simply don't work. For example, at the University of Mississippi, researchers failed to get one successful graft from the sixty that were attempted between Cannabis and Humulus. A method that works about 40 percent of the time is as follows. (Adapted from 205)

Start the hops plants one to two weeks before the marijuana plants. Plant the seeds within six inches of each other or start them in separate six-inch pots. The plants are ready to graft when the seedling are strong (about five and four weeks respectively) but their stem has not lost their soft texture. Make a diagonal incision about halfway through each stem at approximate the same levels (hops is a vine). Insert the cut portions into each other. Seal the graft with cellulose tape, wound string, or other standard grafting materials. In about two weeks, the graft will have taken. Then cut away the unwanted Cannabis top and the hops bottom to complete the graft. Good luck, but don't expect to get high from the hops leaves. "
 

Miyagi

Well-Known Member
That thing about the hops I think you'll find is bollocks, although I hop you prove me wrong... If you really dig past all the rumors you'll find the only real references are sketchy ones from 30-40 years ago and they don't report much success, if my weed addled memory serves me correct.
As far as grafting different weed strains- YES! It is easy...
IMAG0230.jpgIMAG0231.jpgIMAG0176.jpg
 
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DST

Well-Known Member
Absolutely, go ointo youtube there is a video of the midnight gardener who is visiting the Dampkring grow store in Amsterdam where they have a plant with 5 different mother grafted onto one base. If you are limited with number legally then this is an ideal way of keeping multiple strains on one plant. And no, when taking clones you will only get the genetics from the branch you are cloning from.

here's the vid:
[youtube]QGhWLaTopL4[/youtube]
 

Miyagi

Well-Known Member
Absolutely, go ointo youtube there is a video of the midnight gardener who is visiting the Dampkring grow store in Amsterdam where they have a plant with 5 different mother grafted onto one base. If you are limited with number legally then this is an ideal way of keeping multiple strains on one plant. And no, when taking clones you will only get the genetics from the branch you are cloning from.

here's the vid:
[youtube]QGhWLaTopL4[/youtube]
I saw that mother a few weeks ago and was appalled, it was covered in spidermites! I'll try to dig up the pics we took to back it up and if it turns out I was somewhere else, I apologise...
 

Undercover Cop

Active Member
Cannabis and Hops are very similar as far as their genetics, and they both have individual sexes which is quite rare in the plant world. I agree with the post by Darkdestruction, they can be grafted on to each other, and no the tops of the hops plant will not produce THC if grafted onto a MJ root/stalk. But you can graft several MJ tops onto a hops vine and they will flourish. I have a relative in germany that has very old hops vines trained up the side of his house and had several colas growing right on the railing of his second floor balcony. The hops vine is well rooted with THICK stems/vines and he just grows out MJ clones from a mother and grafts tops onto the hops vines as they grow around the railing. Twice a year his gets his whole 8ft balcony loaded with fat colas growing under the sun. Ive seen it. You could root a hops vine and train it to a place that is hidden from view on a roof or balcony, then as long as it gets enough sunlight you can have a nice stealth outdoor garden.
 

Miyagi

Well-Known Member
View attachment 2030070
Update: current state of my multi strain mother after a massive haircut and a tie down. There are enough sites of each that she will quickly fill out again and I will have a handfull of clones of each:bigjoint:ready for whatever.
 

MacGuyver4.2.0

Well-Known Member
I want to experiment in this area as well. What I propose is maybe a bit different however. I want to graft the top of a healthy indica to the lower section of a sativa and vice versa. Not really sure what this will entail however. Will I end up with a tall indica that takes forever to finish that is so dank it has gone plaid? (yes, that's a Space Balls reference). Or will I end up with a short Sativa that finshes early and produces some serious knockout medicine? This should be a fun experiment as I'm going to be grafting Heirloom tomatoes to Hybrid root stock this spring (they have been doing this for years and it works very well). I will post pics and new thread once I get it all going. If anyone else has already done this let us know!
 

Brick Top

New Member
Being an annual there isn't, for the most part, much value to be found in grafting cannabis plants.

But where grafting comes in handy is with mothers in med states where there are limitations on numbers of plants.

If you graft two, three, four or more strains on a mother, or mothers, it still only counts as one single plant, but you could then have many different strains to grow clones from, all from one or two, or whatever, mother plants.

Just hang a tag with the strain name on it or piece or colored plant tape with the strain name on it from each grafted branch/strain so you can keep track of which part of each mother is what different strain.

That is the greatest value to grafting when it comes to cannabis plants.
 

1two3

Active Member
Stop by the advanced cultivation section. There's a few threads on this topic.

https://www.rollitup.org/advanced-marijuana-cultivation/403595-how-easily-graft-marijuana-plant.html

From what I've read, yes hops can be grafted onto cannabis stalks, and vice versa. However, it will only continue to grow like it would normally after it's healed up. A hops plant wouldn't start spouting trichomes, and one strain of cannabis grafted onto another wouldn't become a hybrid cross, it would be multiple different strains sharing one stalk/root system. A great thing for someone with plant limits, who would like to keep a "super mother" of a few different strains. Just make sure their labeled ;)
 

Undercover Cop

Active Member
My mom has a "fruit cocktail" tree... orange, lemon, grapefruit and lime all on the same tree, just different citrus brances grafted onto a healthy trunk/stem. Same dealie
 
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